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There is also a multi-threaded test that uses all threads or nT of a tested CPU. The benchmark has two tests, a single-core workload that will utilize one thread or 1T. WPrime, Cinebench, RealBench and AIDA64 Cinebench,RealBench and AIDA64 CinebenchĬinebench is a long-standing render benchmark that has been heavily relied upon by both Intel and AMD to showcase their newest platforms during unveils. Rather than using a general GPU, this core is located on the processor die and is dedicated just for video processing. (The other is NVENC via NVIDIA GeForce GPUs.) Intel Quick Sync is Intel's version of dedicated video encoding and decoding hardware core.
#Quicksync supported cpus windows 10
OS: Microsoft Windows 10 (buy from Amazon)įor those interested in a deeper dive into Rocket Lake, you can check out our review of the Core i9-11900K here. One of these options is having a processor that include Intel Quick Sync.Power Supply: Corsair RM750x (buy from Amazon).OS Storage: Sabrent Rocket 4 Plus NVMe (buy from Amazon).Cooler: MSI CoreLiquid K360 (buy from Amazon).RAM: 2x8GB Thermaltake Toughram XG DDR4 4000MHz (buy from Amazon).GPU: ASUS TUF RTX 3080 10GB (buy from Amazon).Motherboard: ROG Maximus Hero XIII (buy from Amazon).Hardware encoding for VP8 was dropped and hardware decoding is only available on Tiger Lake.Thermaltake is onboard with their Toughram XG for all of our CPU and motherboard testing. Gen12 Xe will also support native AV1 decode, which includes 10-bit 4:2:0 16K stills and 10-bit 4:2:0 8K, 4K and 2K video. The Tiger Lake (microprocessor) & Rocket Lake adds VP9 12-bit & 12-bit 4:4:4 hardware decoding and HEVC 12-bit 4:2:0, 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 hardware decoding.
#Quicksync supported cpus .exe
exe installer does not officially support 20H2 (only 2004), so it rejects installation. HEVC hardware encoding quality has also been improved. Thanks Maksim and RjL190365 for your posts in this and other thread, I have been wondering myself why QuickSync stopped working for me since I fresh-installed Windows 10 version 20H2 which comes with a newer Intel driver. The Ice Lake (microprocessor) adds VP9 4:4:4 decoding, VP9 encoding (up to 10-bit and 4:4:4), HEVC 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 decoding and encoding, HDR10 Tone Mapping and Open Source Media Shaders.
#Quicksync supported cpus full
The Kaby Lake, Coffee Lake and Comet Lake microarchitecture adds full fixed-function H.265/HEVC Main10/10-bit encoding and decoding acceleration and full fixed-function VP9 8-bit and 10-bit decoding acceleration and 8-bit encoding acceleration. Version 6 (Kaby Lake, Coffee Lake, Whiskey Lake, Comet Lake) The Skylake microarchitecture adds a full fixed-function H.265/HEVC main/8-bit encoding and decoding acceleration, hybrid and partial HEVC main10/10-bit decoding acceleration, JPEG encoding acceleration for resolutions up to 16,000×16,000 pixels, and partial VP9 encoding and decoding acceleration. I wonder how about vMix supporting those Intel hardware encoder/decoders? It would make my purchase decision very different! But as I’m looking to buy a new laptop and I’m reading test reviews from the new Tiger Lake Intel CPU’s, the have very powerfull H265/HEVC/VP9/AV1 hardware encoders and decoders with up to 12 bit 4:2:0, 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 without putting stress on the CPU. I mean it’s great to use Nvidia hardware encoding and I use it to my upmost satisfaction on my tower workstation where there is plenty of space for a very good cooling solution.
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Since a few generations, Intel does build in more and more high performance video decoders and encoders in it’s CPU’s and I wonder if vMix does support them.